Suppose reason and experience suggest to me that it is almost certain that some of what I believe is in fact false, but that I am not in a position to know which of my beliefs will turn out to have been wrong.
The conjunction of all of my beliefs is thus false, but only because at least one of them is false; the claim that I believe something false is an existential claim, and ranges over my beliefs disjunctively.
Put another way, I must believe that my beliefs taken together,
in sensu composito, are false, while at the same time believing of each,
in sensu diviso, that it is true, since these are after all my beliefs. If someone were to enumerate my beliefs, and question me about them one by one, at the end they would announce that I do
not after all believe that one of my beliefs is false, because "my beliefs" is just the conjunction of a great many things I believe are true. This is a quandary.
A tempting approach is to say that since I believe a certain number of my beliefs are false, without knowing which ones, my attitude toward
each of my beliefs should be that it might be one of the false ones. But this is problematic because a conjunction of all of these "might be false"'s leads to the conclusion that all of my beliefs might be false, which is not what I think at all. Quandary unresolved.
And the problem isn't restricted to these universal conjunctions. If I believe there is a needle in a haystack, I need not believe, of any subset of the haystack, that it contains the needle; the overwhelming majority of moderately sized "substacks" will not contain the needle. But I must at the same time believe that there is a substack that does contain the needle.
And all of this applies to facts, though I've been presenting it in terms of beliefs. Most subsets of my beliefs have conjunctions that are true, and most substacks of the haystack do not contain the needle.
We can also, in a sense, reverse our analysis: I could hold that my beliefs are generally true (
de dicto) while refusing to endorse unreservedly any one of them taken individually (
de re). As a matter of simplistic probability, if I figure 99% of my beliefs are true, I could say of each that the chances of it being true are 99 out of 100 and leave it at that.
Is there a way out of this?
I'm not sure. One thing that looks a bit suspicious to me is the temptation to treat our beliefs as a countable (either finite or countably infinite) set, something like a haystack that we really could examine member by member. It could be argued that in reasoning, we only deal with such finite or countably infinite sets, but I'm not sure that's true either, because reasoning always takes place within a context of quite vaguely defined background knowledge. I find the idea that beliefs could be enumerated as implausible as enumerating the real numbers. If that view is correct, the model relied on here is faulty. But I'm not certain. Despite my reservations about background knowledge, deliberate reasoning does consist in part of trying to restrict which of our beliefs are in play and which are not, so perhaps that objection misses the point, while quite rightly drawing attention to the fact that whether we reason successfully is sometimes down to whether we have properly drawn the boundary between what we include and what we exclude. (That is, have we kept out everything we should, and let in everything we should?)
There is some fuzziness in the analogies here too. If I know there is a needle in a haystack, then I know there is some subset of the haystack that contains the needle, but would I really claim to
know, of any given substack, that it does or does not contain the needle? I have probability on my side, so there's justification about, but if I claim to know of each substack that it does not contain the needle, I am (1) effectively claiming there is no needle, and (2) I am wrong on at least one occasion. And here it begins to look like not so much a case of the occasion when we're wrong being unfortunate, as we usually think, as all the cases in which we were right being lucky. (Which suggests we were doing some part of the analysis backwards, that we have the wrong designated term.)
I haven't solved it yet. My real suspicion is that there is mistake in moving from "Somewhere among my beliefs there is a falsehood" to "I should think, of each of my beliefs, that it might be false." There's something wrong there, which is what motivated this ramble, but I don't have an alternative model to offer yet.